If it’s a tool, you aren’t necessarily able to control what it does under your direction.
This is false. A tool, by definition, is controlled by the user of said tool. AI is controlled by user input. Any AI that cannot be controlled by said input is said to be “misaligned” and is considered a broken tool. OpenAI lays out clearly what it’s AI is trained to do and not do. It is not responsible if you use the tool they created in a way that is not recommended.
Any AI prompt fits the definition of a tool:
From Merriam-Webster:
2b: an element of a computer program (such as a graphics application) that activates and controls a particular function
In my opinion; the AI should not be equipped to bypass it’s guardrails even when prompted to do so. A hammer did not tell you to use it as a drill; it’s user decided to do that.
The user alone has the creativity to use the tool to achieve their goal.
This is false. A tool, by definition, is controlled by the user of said tool. AI is controlled by user input. Any AI that cannot be controlled by said input is said to be “misaligned” and is considered a broken tool. OpenAI lays out clearly what it’s AI is trained to do and not do. It is not responsible if you use the tool they created in a way that is not recommended.
Any AI prompt fits the definition of a tool:
From Merriam-Webster:
In my opinion; the AI should not be equipped to bypass it’s guardrails even when prompted to do so. A hammer did not tell you to use it as a drill; it’s user decided to do that.
The user alone has the creativity to use the tool to achieve their goal.